Great Wealth Pours to Those Who Fan Three Sparks

Fan three sparks for great wealth.

Steve Jobs, Tom Douglas and Mark Twain did.

You can too.

Steve Jobs fanning sparks to wealth
Steve Jobs fanning the sparks/Baker Jarvis/Shutterstock

Spark 1: Be foolish

Be foolish.

Not stupid foolish.  Creatively foolish.

When Steve Jobs formally dropped out of Reed College, he informally dropped in on certain courses.

One of his favorites was calligraphy.

That’s why the fonts on a Mac are visually amazing.

Steve Jobs saw the craving we all have for beauty before he saw programming.

“We designed the (calligraphy) into the Mac.  It was the first computer with beautiful typography.  If I had never dropped in on that single course in college, the Mac would have never had multiple typefaces.  And since Windows just copied the Mac, it’s likely that no personal computer would have them.”  Steve Jobs, 2005 Stanford Speech

Great wealth is highly sensitive to the actions we take.

Wealth breathes inside of us.

But, it’s manifest through persistent acts of creation.

Spark 2: Stick to creativity

Stay glued to creativity.

That’s not what George Bailey did in the movie It’s A Wonderful Life.

James Stewart as George Bailey
James Stewart as George Bailey/American Film Institue

He didn’t have a wonderful life just like so many in the workforce today because he limited his philosophy of work to hard core grinding.

That was it.  Find a job that makes “cents” and stick to it even if it doesn’t match your soul and your spirit.

That’s what Tom Douglas did in the eighties in Dallas trying to lease buildings as a commercial real estate agent.

I ran into Tom at church one day and asked him about business.

He gave me that deadpanned look and said it was so bad that it . . .

“makes you wanna smoke cigarettes and drink hard liquor.”  Tom Douglas

Like George Bailey, Tom was depressed in a highly commendable career.

He knew his work wasn’t glued to his soul.

So I asked him on another day at church, “Tom what do you wanna really do?”

“Write country music.”

Right Tom.  Just like everybody else.

Except Tom was rewarded when he did just that.

Move to Nashville and write country music.

“When I finally came to terms with the fact that creativity was a God given gift…and a gift I should treasure and enjoy…..things started to fall into place….one gleaming Saturday morning at age 39, I sat down at an out of tune piano and opened up my black and white composition book and told the truth…I opened up a vein and bled on the page….. 
I wrote a song about a guy starting over..I wrote my story..it is a metaphor…..staring down his demons….asking for forgiveness….broken….needing and finding redemption….’I think I’m on a roll here in Little Rock…solid as a stone baby wait and see..got one small problem here in Little Rock….without you baby I’m not me’… Went to an NSAI songwriting seminar in Austin Tx ….re-connected with Paul Worley …a friend whom I had known when I lived in Nashville ten years earlier…there is a plan after ALL! He signed me to Sony Publishing…Collin Raye recorded Little Rock…it went to #1…the Red Sea parted and I walked to the Promise Land”  Tom Douglas, Songwriters Bleed Ink

Tom Douglas 1994
Tom Douglas 1994/Jodi Richfield/Park Cities People
Tom Douglas at 2011 Golden Globes
Tom Douglas 2011 Golden Globes/Frazier Harrison/Getty Images

Tom Douglas has written top ten hits for Miranda Lambert, Lady Antebellum, Tim McGraw, Martina McBride and John Michael Montgomery.

In 2010, he was nominated for an Oscar and a Golden Globe for the song “Coming Home.”  In 2014, he was inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame.

Stay glued to creativity even when the present circumstances defy your faith.

Spark 3: Be an amateur

Be a silly amateur.

Austin Kleon points out in his book, Show Your Work, that a pro is just an amateur “who gets obsessed by something and spends a ton of time thinking out loud about it.”  In effect, a pro is an amateur willing to be a fool in love with an idea over and over again.

Mark Twain sparked ideas
Mark Twain sparked a wealth of ideas

What does this have to do with wealth?  Two things.

  • Ideation is essential for wealth creation
  • Reading is essential for ideation

Mark Twain read books over and over again.

They were his source for new ideas and new books.

“On the table by him, and on his bed, and on the billiard-room shelves, he kept the books he read most.  All or nearly all, had annotations—spontaneously uttered marginal notes, title prefatories, or concluding comments.  They were the books he had read again and again, and it was seldom that he had not had something to say with each fresh reading.”  Albert Bigelow, Mark Twain: A Biography

 Be foolish.  Be creative.  Be a silly amateur.

 What fires your creativity?

Great Wealth Pours to Those Who Fan Three Sparks